Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

MOTHER LOOKING
FOR her SON
Aditya kantharaju

Missing

ifYOU HAVE ANY 
INFORMATION 
PLEASE CALL 911, 
mention case 
#16-13802

ACROSS
1 Pütisserie cake
7 Sold for, as a
stock
15 Derby racers
16 Taps, essentially
17 Reprimand to one
not picking up
19 Pound denizen
20 Biblical birthright
seller
21 Oldest of the
gods, in Plato’s
“Symposium”
22 Rail transport
landmark
26 At a minimum
27 Swimmer’s option
32 Invite
35 Game winner
36 Lunch order
39 Minuteman, e.g.
42 Smoke and mirrors
43 “The Soul of a
Butterfly”
memoirist
44 Essen article
45 Concluded, with
“up”
46 First 12 children of
Gaia and Uranus
49 “How surprising!”
54 Light, colorwise
58 Chanel No. 1?
59 Columnist Barrett
60 Sir Edward Elgar
composition
whose title has
never been solved
... and a hint to this
puzzle’s circles
65 Exercises
displaying great
strength
66 Conventioneer
with antennae,
perhaps
67 “Don’t budge!”
68 “Honor Thy
Father” author

DOWN
1 Exit
2 Intense
3 Design for some
MacDonalds
4 Poetic “previous
to”
5 Its slot always
pays
6 Winner of all
three tug-of-war
medals in the
1904 Olympics:
Abbr.
7 Formal phone call
response

8 Journalist son of
Mia Farrow
9 Debate
10 Some evidence
11 Carlisle Cullen’s
wife in the
“Twilight” series
12 Evil follower?
13 And
14 Word with coin or
ring
15 Places to clean
and press
18 Powder room
containers
23 Tied up
24 Online finance
company
25 Hard-to-miss
signs
27 Trig function
28 Hosp. personnel
29 Like much of
Australia’s interior
30 Noah of “The
Librarian” TV
films
31 Look wrong?
32 Reichenbach
Falls setting
33 Teed off
34 “I __ it!”
37 Stradivari’s tutor
38 Lombardy’s
capital
40 Co. merged into
Verizon

41 Start one’s law
practice
47 Composer
Stravinsky
48 Hit
49 Caesarean
section?
50 Mayflower figure
51 Errant golf shots
52 Musical with “jr.”
and “KIDS”
versions for
young
performers

53 Shock, in a way
54 Church lineups
55 Gross subj.?
56 Capital of 
Turkey
57 Like French 
toast
61 __-jongg
62 Addams family
member
63 Altar
constellation
64 Part of 40-Down:
Abbr.

By Jeffrey Wechsler
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
04/01/16

04/01/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Friday, April 1, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

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Many are Cat Friendly
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Parking, Laundry, Lots of Common area
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 pay electric to DTE; Limited parking avail
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required. www.deincoproperties.com
734‑996‑1991

SERVICES

FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

6 — Friday, April 1, 2016
Arts
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

‘U’ students start a 
new local music fest

By DAYTON HARE

Daily Arts Writer

In the not too distant past, 

it was sometimes maddeningly 
difficult to gain access to art of 
interest to you. 
If you wanted 
to hear a piece 
of music, you 
had to go to the 
record 
store 

and hope they 
had it. If you 
wanted to read 
a 
somewhat 

obscure book, 
you had to visit 
your local library and hope it 
was somewhere in their system. 
Visual art could be seen in gal-
leries or in picture books. But in 
the present hyperconnected age, 
when we’re all supersaturated 
with various forms of media, 
entertainment and art via the 
Internet, we can find almost 
anything we want with a few 
clicks and keyboard commands 
(indeed, the challenge today is 
mostly sorting through the vast 
quantity of information to deter-
mine what is worth our time).

While it’s excellent to have 

such easy access to so much, one 
of the regrettable side effects 
of this situation is that we now 
have a tendency to overlook the 
work of local artists, having 
removed the immediacy of being 
local, one of their main advan-
tages. But it’s important to note 
that by so doing we potentially 
lose something extremely valu-
able — a sense of community. 
A sense which is constructed 

through the togetherness of 
people enjoying the art of their 
neighbors. All well-known art-
ists were once local. Without 
the support of those around 
them, the great artists of history 
may have failed to achieve the 
fame they ultimately possessed. 
After all, The Beatles started as 
a group of Liverpool teenagers 
jamming together.

For all of those reasons, it’s 

very exciting that this weekend 
Ann Arbor will have an oppor-
tunity to consume a tremendous 
quantity of local art, gathered 
in a single place as part of the 
Threads All Arts Festival.

“There’s a bunch of things 

happening in Ann Arbor, there’s 
a lot of people who come through 
Ann Arbor, but there’s not a lot 
of people who go to the shows of 
the art that’s happening here,” 
said Nicole Patrick, School of 
Music, Theatre & Dance senior 
and one of the founders of 
Threads. “So we were kind of 
like ‘Let’s make our own festi-
val, and see what happens.’ It 
was kind of a joke at first, and 
then we wrote a proposal, and 
then it wasn’t a joke — no, mostly 
a dream, not a joke.”

Patrick and her friend, School 

of Music, Theatre & Dance 
senior Samuel Schaefer, initially 
had the idea to start an arts fes-
tival after attempting to gain 
funding for another project of 
theirs.

“Sam also works on a project 

out of our house — we also live 
together. We turned our attic 
into a recording studio,” Pat-
rick said. “It’s called Stereo Par-
rot, and it’s a recording label … 
they’ve released five to seven 
albums since they started. We 
wanted to get a few dollars for 
that going.”

The pair submitted grant pro-

posals to the EXCEL Program 
for three projects. The program 
provides 
entrepreneurship 

training and career services for 
University students within the 
performing arts.

“We had that idea, kind of 

came up with a grant proposal. 
I took it into my drum teacher, 
Michael Gould,” Patrick said. 
 

“He was like ‘Yeah that’s great, 
but you guys should just like, 
apply for everything you ever 
wanted to do. Don’t just write 
one proposal.’ So we submitted 
three: one for Stereo Parrot, one 
for Threads and one for our band 
Rooms.”

The application to get fund-

ing for Threads was ultimately 
successful, and in the time since 
the proposal, Patrick, Schaefer 
and an additional four friends 
who joined the project have 
worked to bring a diverse array 
of arts and artists to the event 
— from the Balkan brass band 
Rhyta Musik to contemporary 
dancers. This year, Threads will 
have over 50 performing artists 
present, most of which are musi-
cians, with rock bands, original 
classical compositions, jazz and 

more.

“We kind of wanted to touch 

on every genre that we got,” 
Patrick said. “A few electronic 
things too, and DJs as well, that 
are also using projections and 
stuff like that.”

Threads will incorporate far 

more than just music however, 
giving a platform to all sorts of 
artists, such as modern dancers, 
poets, film artists and visual art-
ists. 

This diversity of art genres 

and performances is reflected in 
the name of the festival, Threads 
All Arts, which Patrick said was 
a name long in its conception.

“It came from one of the peo-

ple on the team — Karen Too-
masian, who’s an architect, just 
graduated — she was standing in 
the doorway, with her backpack 
on,” Patrick said. “And — this is 
how she says it — she was looking 
at the rug that was on the floor, 
and she was like, ‘Man, there’s 
a lot of things that make up this 
rug, and that’s cool because it’s a 
pretty rug, and threads, there’s a 
lot of threads on here. Guys we 
should name it threads!’ And it 
was finally the first name that 
everyone didn’t totally hate, so 
we had to keep it.”

The festival will be held on 

Friday April 1 and Saturday 
April 2 at the Yellow Barn, a 
local performance space.

Threads is also partnering 

with UMS to showcase some of 
their local artists in residence, 
who will be performing in the 
festival. 

“(UMS has) helped us a bunch, 

really in term of promotion,” 
Patrick said. “It’s really great.”

Patrick said he hopes that this 

weekend’s festival can be the 
first of many, emphasizing the 
value of local art.

“We really believe that the 

community will feel stronger 
connections to the place that 
they live if they are also aware 
of the artists who live here,” Pat-
rick said. “The cool thing about 
Ann Arbor is that it’s so small 
that it’s like, your cashier is also 
your friend, is also your neigh-
bor, is also this person who’s 
been releasing albums that you 
haven’t known about for 10 
years. And we really want to be 
sort of like a vessel for artists 
trying to establish themselves 
in this town … it’s pretty inspir-
ing, I think, to know that you’re 
walking on the same sidewalk as 
someone who has those feelings 
and expresses themselves in that 
way.”

EVENT PREVIEW
ASA to celebrate 
African identity

Eighteenth annual 
show fuses music, 
dance, comedy, 

fashion and stories

By MARIA ROBINS-SOMER-

VILLE

Daily Arts Writer

We were. We are. We will be. 

These are the lines that both 
divide and unite the theme 
of this year’s 
Annual 
Afri-

can 
Culture 

show, an annu-
al 
tradition 

created by the 
African 
Stu-

dents Associa-
tion that fuses 
music, dance, 
comedy, fash-
ion and rich 
storytelling 
to explore the 
roots of many 
African 
stu-

dents on cam-
pus.

LSA senior Lukonde Mulen-

ga, president of ASA joined 
the club her freshman year in 
hopes of connecting with other 
African students in a way that 
was unavailable to her in high 
school.

“My parents are from Zam-

bia, and not many Zambians 
immigrate from Zambia,” she 
said. “So where we were living 

the closest people from Zambia 
to us were an hour away.” 

LSA junior Seun Oladipo, 

ASA’s social media chair, said 
he hopes to ensure that the Cul-
ture Show includes a broad and 
diverse representation of Afri-
ca’s 54 countries. 

“We try and get a very 

regional representation,” Ola-
dipo said. “The campus can 
be very much West African-
based, so we try to span dif-
ferent regions within Africa. It 
should be a really educational, 
but really fun experience for 
everyone.”

“I want to leave with ASA 

knowing that they are repre-
senting the entirety of Africa 
and not just one part,” Mulenga 
added.

Historically, the African Cul-

ture Show has been lively and 
well-loved and Oladipo said 
she feels the pressure to exceed 
expectations for this year’s per-
formance.

“I think one of my biggest 

challenges this year is making 
sure that people aren’t compla-
cent,” she said. “We did really 
have a good show last year, and 
I feel like some people came 
into it thinking, ‘oh it’ll be 
amazing,’ not really realizing 
that there is a lot of work that 
goes into making the show.”

About 60 people are involved 

in producing Afrolution this 
year. The group gets support 
from their graduate chapter 
and, has worked to bring in acts 

from outside of the University 
of Michigan community and 
even from outside of the United 
States to perform.

The fashion show, which fea-

tures students exclusively, is a 
mainstay of the African Culture 
show. The group holds open 
auditions for models and com-
bines African-inspired fashions 
with authentic clothing donat-
ed by students and their fami-
lies over the years.

“One place where the theme 

is really apparent is in the fash-
ion show,” Oladipo said. “You 
can see the progression of the 
clothes, how it was pre-colonial 
to how a lot of Africans are 
dressing now to where you see 
the fashion aesthetic going in 
the future.”

She noted that with the show 

in particular, attendees will 
see some differences — though 
they’ll have to wait until the 
show to find out what they are.

“Something that we’ve been 

trying to do differently is the 
way the fashion show is struc-
tured,” Oladipo said. “In pre-
vious years it’d be sectioned 
off by the tempo of the walk, 
so we’d have a slow walk and a 
medium walk and a fast walk, 
and we kind of stuck with that 
for a bunch of years.” 

In combining history, pride, 

music and identity, ASA links 
generations to celebrate what it 
means, has meant and will one 
day mean to be part of a vibrant 
African community. 

LOOK FOR AWESOME 
ARTS COVERAGE FROM 
ALL OVER THE COUNTRY 

THIS SUMMER

WE’LL BE AT MUSIC 

FESTIVALS, CONFERENCES, 

AND JUST GENERALLY 

DOING COOL STUFF

AND, OF COURSE, WE’LL 
STILL BE HERE IN A2, TOO

E-mail katjacqu@umich.edu & 

ajtheis@umich.edu for an Arts app.

EVENT PREVIEW

18th Annu-
al African 
Culture 
Show: 
Afrolution

Apr. 2, 
7:30 p.m.

Power Center

$10 students/ $12 

non-students 

Threads 
All Arts 
Festival

Apr. 1-2

The Yellow Barn

$5 Two-Day Pass

“Let’s make our 

own festival 
and see what 

happens.”

